Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, July 21, 1955, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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    THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA. OREGON. THURSDAY. JULY 21. 1955
Air Force Sergeant
Visits Parents
/S gt. lc and Mrs. Robert Jones
and daughter Linda arrived in
Nyssa Monday for a two weeks'
with Sgt. Jones' parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Jones.
Sgt. Jones has been stationed at
Craig Field, A labam a w ith the
U. S. Air Force. Upon completion
of his leave he will be sent to
G erm any for a three year assign­
ment.
Dr. John Easly
O ptom etrist
Ontario. Ore.
P h o n e E n te r p r is e 401
• No to ll c h a rité )
Home beaut/ oe^um
w ith ...
Stunz L um ber Co.
Tobler's Trounce
Nyssa 1st, Parma W aggoners Beat
Kings
of
Nam
pa
Caldwell to End
Still Hold Leads
W aggoner Motors ball club took
a whopping victory from Kings 27-Game Streak
In L.D.S. Play
Packing of Nampa in a game
Nyssa 2nd. Nyssa 1st and Parm a
won their games Tuesday even­
ing in the second half of LDS
league play at the rodeo grounds.
Losing teams were Ontario, Vale
and Owyhee.
In the most exciting game of
the evening, Nyssa 2nd broke a
5th inning tie of 5 to 5 with a
free for all at the home plate and
scored 5 runs. Final score was 10
to 5 and the game was called due
to a time limit.
Batteries for Nyssa second were
Gary Beus and Steve Talbot and
Gerry Doman and Gary W inegar
for Ontario.
Friday night fans will see Owy­
hee against Nyssa 2nd: Vale vs
Parm a and Nyssa 1st vs Ontario.
Nyssa 1st
2
0
Parm a
2
0
Owyhee
1
Nyssa 2nd
1
9
Ontario
Vale
Mrs. D. O. Bybee and daughter,
Celia Carol, were in Boise Sun­
day evening to hear N annette
sing at the second ward LDS
church.
SAVES TIME !
m ajor upset of the seas­
Monday night at Nampa Poston. In in the
the Caldwell Bi-City league
O ntario and Jay Bybee, Nyssa. on
Feed and Fuel baseball
players on W aggoner’s nine each Tobler's
of Nyssa, smacked out a 7
batted out a home run and Roger team
to 5 win Tuesday night from the
Skeen, pitcher for the local team Caldw
Simplots team. The Nys­
gave up two hits in the five in­ sa nine ell handed
the Caldwell club
ning game.
its
first
defeat
in 27 games this
O ther players on the W aggoner
The Tobler crew claimed
team were Edgel Wood. Bill Mor­ year.
game as theirs with a six-
rison. Dave Savage, Bob Wilson. the
outbreak in the fourth inning.
Bill Ham ilton and Gene Raymond. run Tommy
Holman and Hugh Tob­
A game has been tentatively ler were batteries
Nyssa.
scheduled for Thursday night with Toblers 001 600 for 0—7
7 2
the Labor cam p team at the Nyssa
Sim plots 201 001 1—5 10 2
rodeo grounds.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Fife and fam ­ Heldts Visit In
ily and Mrs. Glen Green and Joy
Lynn returned to Nyssa Monday Southern California
after spending five days at Pay­ Mrs. Louise Heldt and son, Ev­
ette Lakes.
erett returned last week from a
Mrs. Joe McGill and M ary Lee 10-day vacation trip to San Ber­
and Mrs. Ginney Welch Of Corsi­ nardino, Calif.
cana. Texas, visited Monday with They visited at the home of
another son, Paul Heldt and fam ­
Mrs. Herb Cox.
ily
there.
Mr. and Mrs. T. C . Catano.
Rochelle, W alter and Jim m y of
Avalon, N. J., were breakfast RETURN TO GRANDVIEW
guests Tuesday m orning of Mr. The Misses M arriane and Step-
and Mrs. F rank Skeen and family. hany Jean Pike returned to their
The Caíanos are acquainted with home in G randview , Ida., after
the Skeen’s son, Jim , who is now spending the week with their
in Highland Park, N. J. on an grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. D. O
LDS mission.
Bvbee.
Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Sherwood
and Frank w ere dinner guests Mrs. H erb Cox attended funer­
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. C. K W il­ al services at Boise Thursday for
her cousin, Mrs. Ruth Marrs.
liams of Ontario.
W A R N I N G
!
Darryl Steinke Nosed
Out in Archery Tilt
D arryl Steinke. Vale archer,
was nosed out by just three points
by Sherm an Spears, of Portland,
in the N orthw est sectional arch­
ery last Sunday.
Steinke was com peting in the
m en’s instinctive division of the
qpntest and totalled up a score of
633, only to be defeated by Spears,
whose bow brought him 636
points.
W inner of the free-style divis­
ion of the contest, which attracted
cham pion archers from all over
the Northw est, was Bill Stew art,
of Naches, Wash., w ith a score of
717.
HERE FROM SHELLEY
Hank Brown and his brother.
Kay of Shelley, I d a . visited at
the home of N anette Bybee Mon­
day evening. Hank recently
served three years in the arm ed|
forces in Germ any. They are here
to work in the potatoes.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ostrom and
Mr. and Mrs. B artil Ostrom and
Jim m y m ade a pleasure trip to
McCall and Payette Lakes S u n -,
day.
PAGE FIV t
MRS. SMITH INJURED
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight W yckoft
IN FALL AT HOME YARD
and children enjoyed the weelc.
Mrs J C Sm ith is recuper­ end camping near Wallowa.
ating at her home following in­
juries received Monday when she
fell in her yard M rs. Sm ith fell
on her back when she attem pted Dr. G. W. Graves
to walk ove> a terraced portion
• E yes e x a m in e d
of the card that had just been
• G la sse s fitte d
irrigated. She was confined to
bed for several days to recover C a l d w e l l
P h o n e 9-2312
from shock and bruises
Food Freezers
AM ANA — KELVIN ATOR —
RENCO
Chest types — Upright
12 cu. ft. to 26 cu. ft.
SPECIAL PRICES
SPECIAL TERMS
ED CASE FURNITURE CO.
“Honest Goods at Honest Prices”
113
N o. M ain
N yssa,
O re.
'FARM SAFETY IS
IN YOUR HANDS
Farming ~f]st in Work Accidents
DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
• Farm ing is America’s third
most dangerous occupation-—
first in total accidents! B ew arel
• Machinery, falls, falling objects
are the greatest work risks.
B ew are!
SAVES MONEY!
1 he l niversal ‘Jeep’ does hundreds of jobs better and fa ste r...
in 2-wheel drive on the highway, or in 4-wheel drive when
the going is rough — on or off the road, in all kinds of weather.
It hauls heavily loaded trailers, and with power take-off or
hydraulic lift operates a wide variety of farm implements
and industrial equipment.
4 WHEEL DRIVE' ™
'
S t o p p i n g A ccide nts is
G o o d F a r m B usin e ss I
A public service message
prepared hv The Advertís
mg Council in cooperation
»itti the National Safety
Council.
\v ' v i j
NYSSA INSURANCE AGENCY
RALPH LAWRENCE
105 Main St.. N yssa
WlLLYS. . . world's largest makers of 4 wheel drive vehicles
Come ill and get a demonstration...
OWYHEE TRUCK <5, IMPLEMENT
D ial 2228
SwcJze Riuesi 'UcUleif,
CHECKERBOARD NEWS
and your neighbors will +00Í
Color Style Your
Home the EASY W ay
with Fuller's
Free Exterior
Color Piansl
Good color styling can
make a big difference in the
beauty and value of your
home! Whether your house
is frame, stucco or masonry, there's a
new garden-blend Fuller Color Plan
to give it perfect color harmony with
your garden and surrounding land­
scape ... the sure way to good color
styling! Fuller's new soft-toned exte*
rior colors can make your house so
beautiful it will be the pride of youx
whole neighborhood. Come in to*
morrow for your Fuller Color P la n
Folder and dependable painting
information. They're free!
* "IGHr 'out» PAINT
for western bo j «
^
,rucco
PAJNTS " •
YOUR FULLER PAINT DiAUR
DON B. M OSS
FIRESTONE DEALER STORE
N Y S S A . ORE.
Wm
•sc ! )
by Dw ight W yckoff
TOBLER'S FEED & FUEL, INC.
N yssa. O regon
protection .. w hether Z
o r m asonry FU LLER
Dial 2544
■ ■■■f c f i f f l a a a
UNIVERSAL
401 Main St.
• Teach your worker* and family
safety. Repair equipment before
working. Don't “save” hours
and risk good years! Bewarel
!
1 .. A .. . . jv
ROTATION GRAZING
INCREASED BEEF GAINS
Rotation grazing at the U nivers­
ity of Illinois Dixon Springs Ex­
perim ent Station has nearly doub­
led the efficiency of livestock
gains. The station superintendent
reports anim al gains of a pound
for every 14 lbs. of roughage eaten
under the rotation system. That
com pares w ith a pound for every
26 lbs. of roughage under con­
tinuous grazing.
For the last two grazing seasons
at the station, beef steers have
been grazing on a pasture divided
into 7 strips. The strips were
stocked
the anim als ate all the
GETTING CATTLE OFF GRASS available so roughage
in 4 to 7 days.
ONTO FULL FEED
When
the
forage
was
they
Here's a sim ple and safe way moved to another fresh gone,
strip.
of sw itching cattle from pasture
The researchers divided the pas­
to a full feed in drylot. P urina’s ture
w ith electric fence wire
Dr. H. B. G eurin suggests that Each of
strips opened into a
cattle can be switched to a full common the
lane
at the end of the
feed of supplem ent and grain field, w here fresh
while they're still on pasture— vailable to all strips. w ater was a-
the last few weeks while pasture
grazed the pasture even­
is drying up. The only change ly Steers
under
the
rotation system. They
needed when they later moved ate most of the
forage, in contrast
to drylot is a sw itch from grass with the continuous
system, in
to hay.
which grazing is spotty and the
If cattle m ust be moved ab­ anim als refused to eat much of the
ruptly from good pasture to forage. W ith the rotation plan you
drylot feeding. Dr. G eurin sug­ don’t get the bad effects of con­
gests the following. Feed the full tinuous grazing in which part of
supplem ent requirem ent the the pasture may be nearly de­
first day along w ith an equal stroyed through overgrazing while
am ount of grain. Increase grain the rest gets too old, too high in
about a pound a day until cattle fibre content, and less nutritious.
are on full feed of grain in about A REPELLENT-TOXICANT com­
a week.
bination is the latest thing in fly
control. Purina chem ist B. F.
Beaver and entom ologist W. O.
NURSING CHOW FED DRY
H aberm an, pioneered in the de­
BEST FOR ORPHAN PIGS
It’s best to start orphan pigs on velopm
- ent of this effective fly
P urina Nursing Chow in the dry control spray. They introduced it
form, even though they may to the field as Purina Dairy Spray
squeal, or appear to be on a star- Concentrate in February of 1954.
vation strike before starting to The chemical com bination repels
eat. Many feeders are tem pted to flias and also delivers a quick
start orphan pigs on Nursing knock-down and killing effect.
Chow mixed as a gruel. O ur ex ­
perience at the Purina Research t A COATING of green w ater
Farm shows th at this only creates paint on window» in dairy and
more problems, since the liquid poultry house» cuts down on
ration creates a chilling and sani­ the heating effect of the sun in
tation problem and pigs also re- j sum m er. The windows then
sist a sw itch from the gruel to a serve as "shades." when partly
dry ration at a later date. Keep opened. The paint washes off
fre h. clean w ater available, too. easily.
Beginning with the second
week, pigs should be offered Baby
Pig Chow in addition to dry N urs­
ing Chow and water. During the
second and third weeks, they
should have both these rations
available. At the end of the third
week the milk replacer should be
taken away, leaving only the
Babq Pig ration through the sixth
week.
Many of the better hog farm ers
are having more orphan pigs to
care for, since sows sim ply farrow
more pigs than they have “plates”
to feed.
“Much needs to he done to acquaint all farm people with
the size of the farm accident problem. A death toll of 14,000
farm residents each year is a tragic loss to the nation.
“The twelfth observance of National Farm Safety Week
(July 24-JO) will be successful if each farm resident realizes
the fact that his safety is in his own hands, and that he owes
it to himself, to his family and to his community to adopt
safe attitudes and habits.
“The experts assert that the most important way of put­
ting farm safety principles into effect is for the farmer, him­
self, to make a safety inventory of his home, his equipment,
his actions, and his attitudes. Once he develops the attitude
that farming the safe way is also farming the right way,
the accident toll will be greatly reduced.
“My greetings go to every farmer in the United States, to
whom I would say: Your safety is in your hands. Please
be careful for the sake of your nation and your loved ones.’*
/r e * * * - *
Stopping Accidents is G ood Farm Business!
Ç A public service massage from Th» Advertising Council
in cooperation with the National Safety Council
SPONSORED IN THE INTEREST OF FARM SAFETY BY
B 6- M EQUIPMENT CO.
FA R M IM P LE M E N T S FO R M AXIM UM PRO D U CTIO N — AND S A F E T Y
612 North Main (Route 20)
N yssa, Oregon